[@Mao Mao] [hider=Nile][color=pink][sup][h1] [center][img]https://media.sproutsocial.com/uploads/2017/02/10x-featured-social-media-image-size.png[/img][/center] [b][center][color=white]The Nile Territories[/color][/center][/b] [/h1][/sup][/color] [indent][indent][b]The Nile Territories[/b][indent][i]Head of State[/i]: President Faisal Abdullah [i]Head of Government[/i]: C.E.O. Bradley[/indent][/indent][/indent] [indent][indent][b]History of The Nile Territories since 2020[/b][indent]North Africa had always been a hotbed of instability. A playground for great powers and the testbed for ideology it was not a place to stand up to disaster. Yet, disaster was exactly what struck with the onset of climate change, and the corrupt governments rife with institutional problems were far less prepared than the already unready nations elsewhere on the globe. Great refugee waves came from the sunken coasts, clashing with those coming from droughted inlands. But where some saw suffering, others saw opportunity. Creditors from all across the world offered North African nations a great deal of cash such that they could stabilize, with the belief that they would be able to pay it back several times with their geography. However with unpredicted changes in geopolitics largely owing to climate change, combined with the institutional rot of the nations they were ultimately not able to make due on their promises to financial institutions around the world. After the failure of Egypt and Sudan to repay loans that were taken in an effort to curb the immediate effects of climate change, coups were orchestrated in the states by shareholders that believed they would get what was owed to them one way or another. These men were ultimately responsible for the great exacerabation of the refugee crisis as at gunpoint they pushed back those they could not feed leaving many thousands dead of starvation and dehydration. However, bringing in assets from abroad they were able to transform the land around the Nile river into a breadbasket. The new government of the land was ultimately a blight upon the values that the self-described free world espoused. However, its ability to provie food for Europe and even have spare for America made them largely immune to any repercussions out of pure realpolitik. As the new corporate government became more entrenched, more and more manpower was brought in from across the world from engineers and architects to develop ever better irrigation to burly men to work in mines and as PMCs suppressing dissent. The future of the newly proclaimed Nile Territories is said to be bright on the government website. However many people take to this more skeptically, believing that the moment the state is no longer profitable for those that founded it they will simply flee to greener pastures and leave the land in absolute chaos. [/indent][/indent][/indent] [indent][indent][b]Current Issues in the Nile Territories[/b][indent]The Nile Territories have many problems. For one, a very man rebel movements plague the countryside and cities alike. An alliance of convenience has been made by all sorts of malcontents from Arab nationalists to communist revolutionaries to eco-terrorists all of whom despise the current government far more than each other and thus raise their arms against it. Another great difficulty of the Nile territories is the simple fact that as other countries continue to improve their living standards, food production and other faculties the NTs reduce the value of their stocks and hence the stability of the state apparatus. Just as important as the decreasing monopoly on many goods the NTs have to is the increasing ability of countries to scrutinize the many political problems of the Nile Territories from the illegitimacy of its founding to the problems of its existence as a local power bloc to counter efforts such as Francafrique.[/indent][/indent][/indent] [indent][indent][b]Territories of the Nile Territories[/b][indent]The Nile territories hold most of Egypt and Sudan, as well as having purchased non negligible portions of Ethiopia and South Sudan; other parts of North Africa are held illegally under occupation by PMCs for exploitation. [/indent][/indent][/indent] [/hider]